13 GOINGS ON ABOUT TOWN graphs ranging from Hieronymus Bosch to George Bellows and including rare works by Ren1brandt and an etching of a seated nude by Matisse. Through Jan. 15. (Tunick, 12 E. BIst St.) GROUP SHows-At the ACQUAVELLA, 18 E 79th St.: Collages and paintings on paper by Cath- arine Warren, Christo, Robert Nickle, and others. Through Jan. 8. (Open Mondays.). . . BODLEY. 1063 Madison Ave., at 80th St.: Small paintings of houses, and still-lifes by Mary Faulconer, idyllic landscapes by Phyllis Ma- son, and still-lifes by Richard de Menocal. Through Saturday, Dec. 22.... BORGENICHT. 1018 T\1adison Ave., at 79th St.: A show of works on paper by seven artists includes F. L. Schroder, \vho makes collages of dark, glossy wrapping paper and architect's tape; Carl Ja- cobson, who cuts windows in selected squares of a grid pattern and folds one side out, as in an Advent calendar, to reveal abstract designs below; and Joseph Hilton, who lnakes earnest, untutored-looking pencil drawings of nudes and interiors Through Saturday, Dec 15.... FEIST. 1125 Madison Ave., at 84th St.: Euro- pean drawings from the sixteenth century to the nineteenth, including Agostino Carracci's "Profile of a Young Man," in brown pen, and Jean-Baptiste Greuze's interior in gray brush. Through Dec. 28. (Open Mondays.). . . KRAU- SHAAR. 1055 Madison Ave., at 80th St.: Works on paper by such Americans as Sloan, Marin, 1..uks, Pène du Bois, Demuth, and Hartley, plus the original illustrations by Joe Lasker for hIS son David's book "The Boy Who Loved Music." Through Jan. 5.... PERLS. 1016 Madison Ave., at 78th St.: An exhibi- tion of seldom seen drawings by Calder, Lé- ger, Matisse, Miró, Modigliani, Pascin, and Picasso. Through Saturday, Dec. 22. . . . REED. 120 E. 78th St.: The subject is woman, as seen through the discerning eyes of twenty- eight artists, most of them men, ranging from Saul Steinberg to Will em de Kooning Alice N eel has her say, too. Through Saturday, Dec. 15. (Opens at I.) GALLERI ES-57TH STREET AREA ED ARNo-Cartoons, many from this magazine. Through Jan. 4. (Austrian Institute, I I E. 52nd St. Open Mondays; closed Saturdays.) LUI CRUZ AZAcETA-Fantasy paintings (usually based on city-life subjects), self-portraits in colored inks, and other works. Through Jan. I I (Frumkin, 50 W. 57th St. Opens at noon on Saturdays.) TONY BECHARA-Abstract patterns worked out in rich colors on a grid background that is al- most as fine-meshed as graph paper. Through Jan. 12 (Zarre, 41 E. 57th St.) LARRY BELL-Brilliantly colored forms "drawn" by a process in which no pigment is used. Vaporized aluminum and silicon lnonoxide are deposited on paper in a vacuum chamber, forming a film of varying infinitesimal thick- nesses which produce different colors by blocking out different light ra)Ts. Through Jan. 12. (Goodman, 38 E. 57th St. Open Mondays. ) FANNY BRENNAN I MINO ARGENTO-Tiny elegantly executed paintings-a fluffy cloud in1paled on an open safety pin, for instance, or a cali- per holding a painting of a caliper holding a painting of . . .1 Abstract paintings in which soft pastel colors are contrasted with the hard lines of engineering drawings, all worked out on a grid. Through Saturday Dec. 15. (Par- sons. 24 W. 57th St.) JAMES BROOKS AND GIORGIO CAVALLON-Abstract Expressionist vvorks by two veterans of that school, Brooks's the more vigorous and Caval- lon's the softer Through Dec. 29. (Gruene- baum, 38 E. 57th St.) PAUL CADMUS-Not only his paintings and draw- ings, in honor of his seventy-fifth birthday, but art works by his father, his mother, and his sister. Through Dec. 29. (Midtown, I I E. 57th St.) SARAH CANRIGHT-Nonobjective paintings; first solo show in New York. Through Dec. 29. (Pam Adler, 50 W. 57th St.) JAMES COIGNARD-Roughcast collages done on handmade paper-scored, streaked with paint, dotted with figures cut from wallboard, em- bossed with deep patterns, and so on The art- ist is French Through Jan. 12. (Heidenberg, 50 W. 57th St ) S-M-r-W-T-F-S 16 , 17/ 181:: I I 15 2.2. ROBERT COURTRIGHT 1 DOUGLAS ABDELL-Collages.1 Sculptu es that consist of big, black, jagged geometncal n1etal forn1s by an artist who does all his own blacksnlÎthing. Through Jan. 5 (Crispo, 41 E. 57th St Mondays through Fridays. I I :30 to 4 :30; Saturdays, 10 :30 to 5 :3 0 .) JO É DE CREEFT- Twenty-two sculptures, includ- Ing a chased-lead piece from 19 I 9 and an oak carving from this year Also ten paintings. Through Dec. 29. (Kennedy, 40 W. 57th St.) ROBYN DENNy-Seven hard-edge sequential paintings: the sin1ple abstract pattern of one painttng "connects" with the simple abstract pattern of the next, even though they may be hung on separate walls or even in separate rooms. Through Jan. 5. (Jacobson, 24 W. 57th St.) ALBRECHT DÜRER (I47I-I528)-Fifteen engrav- ings portraying the Virgin and Child. Through Jan. 19. (Donson, 38 E. 57th St ) JANET FISH-Pastel still-Hfes. Through Jan. 2. (Miller, 724 Fifth Ave., at 57th St.) EDWARD KOREN-Ink drawings, some of them with color and all shown for the first time, of his characteristic fuzzy creatures Through Sat- urday, Dec. IS. (Dintenfass, 50 W. 57th St.) MORRIS LOUIS (I9I2-62)-A series referred to as , column" paintings, dated 1960, in which he succeeded in pouring acrylic Magna paint on canvas without losing control of it. Through Jan. 2. (Elnmerich, 41 E. 57th St.) GEORGE NICK-Oil paintings recording his trav- els in Spain and Eastern Europe. Through Jan. 3. (De Nagy, 29 W. 57th St.) LUCAS SAMARAs-Fabric paintings: fabric cut and sewn in abstract patterns and hung on stretchers. Through Jan. 5. (Pace 32 E. 57th St ) HARRIET SHORR I PAUL CARANICAS-Oil still-Hfes I Pencil drawings of nlÎlitary bunkers here and in Europe. Through Jan. 2. (Fischbach 29 W 57th St.). . . <<]J Tatistcheff, 38 E 57th St., is showing large-scale watercolor still- lifes by Harriet Shorr. Through Jan. 2. JOAN .SNYDER-Large abstract landscapes, one of whlch-a gentle pastoral painted to welcome her newborn daughter into the world-sig- nals a pronounced change from her polemic canvases of a few years ago. Through Satur- day, Dec. 15. (Halnilton, 20 W. 57th St.) ALTOON SULTAN-More paintings of Victorian-era houses, and a group of paintings with figures. Through Dec 29. (Marlborough, 40 W. 57th St. Open Mondays.) JOHN TORREANO-Six-foot-square canvases freckled with round daubs of acrylic squeezed on directly from the n10uth of the tube and further adorned with a scattering of 'glass jewels. Through Saturday, Dec. 22. (Droll- Kolbert, 724 Fifth Ave., at 57th St.) JOYCE WEINSTEIN-The exhilaration of surveying Manhattan from a tenth-floor downtown stu- dio is sOlnehow reflected in these wholly ab- stract paintings and pastels. Through Satur- day, Dec. 22. (Long, 7 W. 57th St.) GROUP SHows-At the A 1,;0 NZO. go W. 57th St.: Small-scale works in several mediun1s by twenty-seven artists. Through Jan. 5.... GALERIE ST. ETIENNE, 24 W. 57th St. : A fortieth- anniversary show includes slnalI works by a number of famous artists-Daun1Ìer Ko- koschka Toulouse-Lautrec, Rouault, nd so on, with emphasis on Klimt and Schiele and Käthe Kollwitz. Through Dec. 28. (vVednes- days through Fridays, I I to 5.). . . ODYSSIA. 730 Fifth Ave., at 57th St.: Works on paper by Kitaj. Ce1n1Ìns, Balthus, Steinberg, and many others Through Dec. 29. . . . PARSONS-DREYFUSS. 24 \""1 57th St.: Works b) thirteen artists in various Inediull1s: Jason Stewart, Lenke Roth- man, Ellen Tuchman. Through Friday, Dec. 21. . . . PEARL, 29 W. 57th St.: Contemporary landscape painters Binnelin, Chaet, J acquette, Lytle, and Richard Shehan Through Jan. 3. .. TOUCHSTONE, 29 W. 57th St.: A show of striking drawings, including Harriet F eigen- baum's inunense charcoal work showing how the Palace of the Popes in Avignon would look if filled, as she proposes, with hay; Chris- to's large drawing of the Pont K euf in Paris as itnproved by his wrapping; -one of Dotty Attie s insinuating stories with her tiny, im- peccable illustrations; and several works by David Hockney. Through Dec. 29. GALLERI ES-SoHo Ross BLECKNER-Abstract paintings. Through Jan. 10 (Boone, 420 \tVest Broadway.) GEORGE GREEN- Trompe-l'oeil paintings Through Dec. 29. (Meisel, 141 Prince St ) LAURACE JAMES-Sculptures, some freestanding and SOlne hung on the wall, n1ade of pine tim- bers strung together with rope and sometimes with a slab of marble or slate added. Most of the woooen components are hinged, so that the works can be reorganized at Vv ill. Through Saturday, Dec. 15. (A.I.R., 97 Wooster St.) MADELEINE KAUFMAN-Fresh-looking floral-pat- tern paintings done in vertical stripes incor- porating collage, oils, color-Xerox insets, and occasional applications of gold leaf Through Thursday, Dec. 20. (Eno, 101 Wooster St. Opens at noon.) CHRISTOPHER KNOWLES I GEORGE SCHNEEMAN- Huge, childlike Christmas drawings done in green and red, most of them reaching to the gallery ceiling-Santa Claus, gift pacKages, Tannenbaun1 I Small, clean-cut fresco por- traits of fellow-artists and contemporary lit- erary figures Through Saturday, Dec. 15. (Holly Solon10n, 392 West Broadway.) CHARLES LUCE- This artist weaves fantasies and documents then1 with lnaps, charts, "relics," and so on Through Saturday Dec. 22. CVley- er, 410 West Broadway.) HllARIE MAls-Large freestanding sculptures (and one wall piece) made of steel rods welded together and stained, so that they look like line drawings when seen against a white back- ground, as they are here. Through Saturday, Dec. 22 (Cuninghan1, 94 Prince St Opens at 2 on Saturdays ) JOHN MANDEL-Pencil studies of n1en in which facial details are done to perfection and the rest is sketched in lightly; each has a nar- rative quality, but it is up to the viewer to provide the story Through Jan. 5. (Hutchin- son, 138 Greene St ) BILL MARTIN / JOHN OKuLicK-Paintings of nature in oil and gouache I Wall constructions. Through Jan 10. (Hofflnan, 429 West Broad- way.) FRANC P ALAIA- This artist lnakes "relics" (in the fonn of corroded signs and crulnbling walls) out of plaster, tempera, and Styrofoam Through Jan. 3. (Neill, 136 Greene St ) GEORGE PEcK-Large, slightly convex, shaped canvases on which endlessly repeated layers of paint have coalesced Through Saturday, Dec 22. (Caldwell, 383 West Broadway.) JACK RADETSKY I DON CELENDER-Folding screens about seven feet high on which are painted what seem to be reflections of the roon1 they onCe adorned-tables, chairs, subdued lamps. 1 This antic pollster has asked a thousand ar- chitects to name the single most instructive and inspiring structure his students should see, and the answers are here, illustrated with photographs. Another poll asked art-world figures (shown in photographs) how they would like to be reincarnated. Lee Krasner wants to be a mennaid, Andy Warhol an heir- ess. . . . <<]J In the back room, crystal-clear blocks of acrylic resin contain delicate ab- stract line drawings, the work of George Hrycun. Through Dec. 29. (O.K. Harris 3 8 3 West Broadway.) MICHAEL VENEZIA / JOSEPH EGAN-Canvas-covered bars, ten feet long and two and a half inches